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为什么《基本医疗保险、工伤保险和生育保险药品目录》中西药和中成药要分甲类目录和乙类目录?

答案

参考答案:

《基本医疗保险、工伤保险和生育保险药品目录》中,甲类目录的药品是临床治疗必需,使用广泛,疗效好,同类药物中价格低的药物。乙类目录的药品是可供临床治疗选择,疗效好,同类药物中比甲类目录药品价格略高的药物。将西药和中成药分为甲、乙两类,主要是考虑到我国各地区间经济水平和医疗消费水平的差异很大。一方面,通过甲类目录,既能保障大多数参保患者基本的医疗需求,又能根据用药适应症的个体差异和经济能力选择使用乙类目录的药品,保证参保患者获得有效的药品。另一方面,通过甲类目录控制全国用药的基本水平,可以宏观控制药品费用支出,同时通过乙类目录给各地根据用药习惯和经济水平留出进行调整的余地。

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单项选择题

It was a ruling that had consumers seething with anger and many a free trader crying foul. On November 20th the European Court of Justice decided that Tesco, a British supermarket chain, should not be allowed to import jeans made by America’s Levi Strauss from outside the European Union and sell them at cut-rate prices without getting permission first from the jeans maker. Ironically, the ruling is based on an EU trademark directive that was designed to protect local, not American, manufacturers from price dumping. The idea is that any brand-owning firm should be allowed to position its goods and segment its markets as it sees fit: Levi’s jeans, just like Gucci handbags, must be allowed to be expensive.

Levi Strauss persuaded the court that, by selling its jeans cheaply alongside soap powder and bananas, Tesco was destroying the image and so the value of its brands—which could only lead to less innovation and, in the long run, would reduce consumer choice. Consumer groups and Tesco say that Levi’s case is specious. The supermarket argues that it was just arbitraging the price differential between Levi’s jeans sold in America and Europe—a service performed a million times a day in financial markets, and one that has led to real benefits for consumers. Tesco has been selling some 15,000 pairs of Levi’s jeans a week, for about half the price they command in specialist stores approved by Levi Strauss. Christine Cross, Tesco’s head of global non-food sourcing, says the ruling risks "creating a Fortress Europe with a vengeance".

The debate will rage on, and has implications well beyond casual clothes (Levi Strauss was joined in its lawsuit by Zino Davidoff, a perfume maker). The question at its heart is not whether brands need to control how they are sold to protect their image, but whether it is the job of the courts to help them do this. Gucci, an Italian clothes label whose image was being destroyed by loose licensing and over-exposure in discount stores, saved itself not by resorting to the courts but by ending contracts with third-party suppliers, controlling its distribution better and opening its own stores. It is now hard to find cut-price Gucci anywhere.

Brand experts argue that Levi Strauss, which has been losing market share to hipper rivals such as Diesel, is no longer p enough to command premium prices. Left to market forces, so-so brands such as Levi’s might well fade away and be replaced by fresher labels. With the courts protecting its prices, Levi Strauss may hang on for longer. But no court can help to make it a great brand again.

The author’s attitude towards Levi’s prospect seems to be()

A.biased

B. indifferent

C. puzzling

D. objective